Kurdish Guerrillas Behind Turkey’s Hashish Trade?

Security forces in southeastern Turkey, where authorities have been waging a brutal counter-insurgency war against Kurdish guerrillas, reported the seizure last week of 2,290 kilograms of hashish and 6,632 kilograms of unprocessed cannabis “in an operation against the drug activities of the PKK terrorist organization.”

The operation took place in five villages of the conflicted Diyarbakır province, with seven suspects taken into custody. Authorities said hundreds of local residents were questioned at checkpoints established across the area. This led to the location of what were described as two “safe houses” and one cave used by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas, where the hash and pot was found along with rifles, ammunition, homemade explosives, supplies and PKK documents.

According to a June 9 report from Turkey’s Daily Sabah: “Reported testimony from a terrorist captured by security forces yesterday indicated that the PKK’s cannabis growing enterprise was a large source of income for the organization…”

This is an ominous sign that Turkey could be retuning to the bad old days.

Hashish and heroin proceeds were reportedly used by both sides in the long war between the PKK and the Turkish state which reached a bloody peak in the 1990s. But back then, the element most notoriously mired in the dope trade was the Grey Wolves, a right-wing paramilitary network that the government used for “disappearances” of suspected guerrilla collaborators and other such under-the-table dirty tricks.

According to a profile on Global Security.org, the Grey Wolves were “financed by heroin trafficking,” with the protection of “high-level figures within the Turkish government.” Although the Grey Wolves went into abeyance after exposure of their unsavory activities, elements linked to the network survive on Turkey’s political right.

The war in Turkey’s East finally seemed to be over when the PKK announced a ceasefire in 2013, in exchange for government guarantees of greater cultural rights for the Kurdish people. But the ceasefire broke down in 2015, opening up a new cycle of guerrilla attacks and government counter-insurgency operations.

Of course most of these seizures are presumably in Turkey’s East (technically in Asia Minor, not Europe), and it is unclear from the report if the seized cannabis was grown within Turkey or being transported from points east toward European markets.

In any case, illegal drugs could once again prove both a goad of war and a pretext for repression, unless both sides can be brought back to the negotiating table and Turkey pressured to finally follow through on its pledges of greater language and cultural rights for Kurds.

Of course, a more tolerant drug policy, especially where cannabis is concerned, wouldn’t hurt either.